Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Lord Howe Island Group' has mentioned 'Subspecies' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
[134] The island has been identified by BirdLife International as an endemic bird area, and the Permanent Park Preserve as an important bird area, because it supports the entire population of Lord Howe woodhens, most of the breeding population of providence petrels, over 1% of the world population of another five seabird species, and the whole populations of three endemic subspecies.
Three endemic passerine subspecies are the Lord Howe golden whistler, Lord Howe silvereye, and Lord Howe currawong.
Lord Howe currawong, Strepera graculina crissalis (vulnerable, subspecies of pied currawong) Lord Howe golden whistler, Pachycephala pectoralis contempta (least concern, subspecies of golden whistler) Lord Howe silvereye, Zosterops lateralis tephropleurus (vulnerable, subspecies of silvereye) Robust white-eye, Zosterops strenuus (extinct) Lord Howe gerygone, Gerygone insularis (extinct) Lord Howe fantail, Rhiphidura fuliginosa cervina (extinct, subspecies of NZ fantail) Lord Howe starling, Aplonis fusca hulliana (extinct, subspecies of extinct Tasman starling) Lord Howe thrush, Turdus poliocephalus vinitinctus (extinct, subspecies of Island thrush) Lord Howe parakeet, Cyanoramphus subflavescens (extinct) Lord Howe boobook, Ninox novaeseelandiae albaria (extinct) Lord Howe woodhen, Gallirallus sylvestris (endangered) Lord Howe swamphen, Porphyrio albus (extinct) Lord Howe pigeon, Columba vitiensis godmanae (extinct)
A significant number of endemic species or subspecies of plants and animals have evolved in a very limited area.
Lord Howe Island supports a number of endangered endemic species or subspecies of plants and animals, for example the Lord Howe Woodhen, which at time of inscription was considered one of the worldxe2x80x99s rarest birds.